Latest market data

Stock search

In Guerrilla Marketing in 30
Days, the late founder
of guerrilla marketing, Jay Conrad Levinson,
and guerrilla marketing expert, Al Lautenslager
offer a dynamic marketing blueprint to help business
owners attract more customers and maximize profits. In
this edited excerpt, the authors offer tips to help you get
more referrals from your satisfied customers and your network.

Ask any small-business owner where most of their business comes
from, and the majority will undoubtedly give the same answer --
word of mouth referrals. Referrals are the recommendations of
others. Getting those recommendations can be easy, viral,
automatic and, in the guerrilla world, profitable. Knowing how to
make this all happen is even more guerrilla like.

Referrals can "just happen," but the more you formalize the
process or put a process in place to make them happen, the
quicker you'll realize increased word-of-mouth sales.

The number-one way to get referrals is to simply ask for them.
Yes, it can be done simply, but many still are challenged by this
simple step to obtaining referrals. Potential "referrers" can't
always read your mind, so it helps to have a process in place to
ask for or obtain referrals.

Questions to drive referrals or a referral mind-set could include
the following:

Is this for this week's supply or for the whole month?

Have you considered the same purchase as a gift for your
friends and family?

Will one be enough, or will you need more in case of loss,
breakage or usage faster than planned?

Would you like to buy one for a friend at a discount?

Would you like to sign our guest book along with friends and
family members to receive special offers?

You'll generally find that most people like to give referrals.
Giving referrals is helping others, and people generally like to
help.

Another fundamental point of referral-based guerrilla marketing
is narrowing the universe of those you ask. If I ask you, "Who
else do you know that could benefit from my products and
services?" I'm asking you to think of everyone you know. Since
everyone generally knows between 150 and 250 people each, I'm
then asking you to think of all those people at one time. Your
reply will probably be, "I don't know right now. Let me think
about that and get back to you." Typically, neither happens.

Now try the same line of questioning, but narrow the universe of
the person you're asking. Phrase your question differently and
instead ask, "Who do you golf with on Sundays that might be
interested in my products or services?" What you're essentially
doing is asking someone to think of four or at most a dozen
people instead of 250 that might be good referrals for you. Many
times, you'll get one referral from this narrowed line of
questioning. Would you rather have one out of 12 as a good
referral or zero out of 250? Narrowing the universe of those you
ask will yield this type of positive result.

There's also a side benefit to this narrowed approach. The next
time your referrer attends the same type of event with the same
narrowed audience, they'll often associate your line of
questioning with their group and think further about your
referral solicitation.

You're probably wondering when the best time to ask for a
referral is. The answer is, when your customer, prospect or
associate is at the peak of their enthusiasm -- when they're in
the most positive frame of mind possible.

If you exceed customer expectations and they compliment you or
exclaim that what you did for them was awesome, they're
undoubtedly in a positive frame of mind. As this happens, don't
waste time -- jump on this opportunity. Ask right then and there
who else they know (narrow the universe if you can) who could
benefit from your products or services.

Another point of positive enthusiasm is when people pay you. Once
again, don't waste time. Pounce and ask for that referral.

One way to manufacture this peak enthusiasm is with a customer
satisfaction survey. Most customers, when filling out such a
survey, will provide positive replies to such a survey. The last
question on a satisfaction survey should be related to asking for
referrals. In the spirit of guerrilla marketing, this is no- or
low-cost marketing and can be leveraged as your referral funnel
fills and even, sometimes, overflows.

The highest level of referral is when an associate sends out a
letter of introduction for you, referring you to their sphere of
influence before you enter that sphere. Once you enter that
sphere, a cold referring situation has become warmer because of
the proactive letter writing by your associate.

Having a proactive referral program in place is only half the job
in getting high-quality referrals. To increase the probability of
getting successful, high-yield referrals, you need to give
high-quality referrals. Act interested in your networking
associate. Find out more about them so you may refer them more
and properly. A great line of questioning is to ask, "What's a
good referral for you?" When you ask this question, you're hoping
for an attitude of reciprocity to kick in -- you want your
networking associate to then ask you what a good referral is for
you. Don't forget to talk about how best to deliver a referral to
you. This also is a chance to suggest the proactive letter
writing campaign to warm up cold referral situations.